Your search
Results 2,163 resources
-
We live in an era in which critique of the West has become a deep-rooted phenomenon of the lives of non-Europeans. This paper contributes to the study of European women perception of South East Asia as mirrored in travel writing accounts and, independently but syncronic, of the Chinese women poets who wrote during a period a few decades before and after the mid nineteenth century. I shall be analysing the Western concept of femininity and domesticity in relation to and symultaneously attempting to reformulate Edward Said’s concept of Orientalism. Central to my research method is the fact that I am trying to add to to a traditional Western-oriented gender issues approach - baded on a review of the mid- nineteenth women travel writers - a reversed view, that being the representation of the Orient emerging from the vision of Chinese women literature. My research not only focuses on the literariness of travel writing, which has been widely neglected, but also on a vision of the Orient that is represented by some Chinese women writers in the nineteenth century –Gan Lirou 甘立媃 (1743-1819) and Lü Bicheng 呂碧城 (1883 – 1943). My research is not a survey study of Chinese literature, and it does not claim to be exhaustive. Instead, I attempt to systematize the problem of Western representations of the Orient by taking Ana d’Almeida’s diary, A Lady’s Visit to Manilla and Japan, as central reference and source of conceptual classification. From there, I am trying to further some gender issues drawn from Ana d'Almeida's text and identify symetric instances of those representations, if present, in Chinese literary texts written roughly in the same historical period. Expending Edward Said’s Orientalism, this paper tries to challenge the classic univocal Orient-Occident approach and to mirror Western Orientalist and pseudo- Orientalist ideas into contemporary Chinese writings. This is also meant to be an introduction to this cross-cultural comparative approach of feminity and domesticity open for further contributions in gender studies as well as in fields bordering social history, history of literature, literary theory and cultural anthropology
-
Vários “pequenos” portugueses fizeram sentir a sua presença na “imensa Asia”, uns quase como reis, alguns como escravos, o maior número simplesmente como portugueses capazes de amar mulheres orientais e ser por elas amados. Capazes de fecundar mulheres de cor e fazer sair dos seus ventres portugueses também de cor.(Several “small” Portuguese made felt their presence in the “enormous Asia”, some as almost kings, others as slaves, the great majority just as Portuguese [who were] able to love oriental women and be loved by them. [They were] able to inseminate women of colour and to make their wombs produce other Portuguese also of colour.)Gilberto Freyre, Aventura e RotinaDespite the dynamics of globalization and rapid economic and political development, it is still noticeable nowadays that several Portuguese creolized communities in postcolonial societies have resisted cultural homogenization, particularly those scattered throughout the detached, peripheral regions of East and Southeast Asia that were under the Estado da Índia's sovereignty and influence (Goa, Daman, Diu, Sri Lanka, Malacca, Macao and Timor) and that the Portuguese created alongside the local political authorities (Indonesia and today's Singapore).By the beginning of the seventeenth century, the official population in the colonies of several territories in Asia that proudly claimed Portuguese ancestry had reached nearly one-and-a-half million individuals, as a legacy of colonial (dis)encounters. Centuries later, the Portuguese descendants of this “shadow empire” forged through trading, matrimonial alliances and cultural networks — notwithstanding a pragmatic adaptation to times of unprecedented political, economic and cultural upheaval — persist in a quest for identity and cultural reaffirmation of “Portuguese” cultural differentiation, which continues to be faithfully perpetuated and transmitted, centuries after the earlier Portuguese contacts ceased. These communities show distinctive aspects of what could be called a certain “Luso-Eurasianness”, exhibited in oral literature, religious practices, family surnames, ceremonies, cuisine, public structures, ways of speaking and, above all, in identity-making religious and cultural reinterpretation of lived and shared commonalities.This study argues that, even if relatively scant attention has been paid to the literary production of the communities considered here, in particular in Anglophone postcolonial studies, they have influenced and continue to exercise seminal influence on most postcolonial imaginaries, either in their respective societies or in the contemporary fiction of the Luso diaspora.
Explore
USJ Theses and Dissertations
-
Doctorate Theses
(68)
- Faculty of Art and Humanities (13)
- Faculty of Business and Law (15)
-
Faculty of Health Sciences
(2)
- Psychology (2)
- Faculty of Religious Studies and Philosophy (5)
- Institute for Data Engineering and Science (3)
-
Institute of Science and Environment
(10)
- Science (10)
-
School of Education
(20)
- Education (20)
-
Master Dissertations
(1,151)
-
Faculty of Arts and Humanities
(122)
- Architecture (8)
- Choral Conducting (10)
- Communication and Media (43)
- Design (25)
- History and Heritage Studies (28)
- Information System (3)
- Lusophone Studies in Linguistics and Literature (8)
- Faculty of Business and Law (521)
-
Faculty of Health Sciences
(213)
- Counselling and Psychotherapy (167)
- Organisational Psychology (25)
- Social Work (20)
-
Faculty of Religious Studies and Philosophy
(26)
- Philosophy (14)
- Religious Studies (12)
- Institute of Science and Environment (28)
-
School of Education
(244)
- Education (244)
-
Faculty of Arts and Humanities
(122)
Academic Units
- Domingos Lam Centre for Research in Education (1)
-
Faculty of Arts and Humanities
(261)
- Adérito Marcos (9)
- Álvaro Barbosa (32)
- Carlos Caires (15)
- Daniel Farinha (2)
- Denis Zuev (4)
- Filipa Martins de Abreu (11)
- Filipa Simões (2)
- Filipe Afonso (12)
- Francisco Vizeu Pinheiro (10)
- Gérald Estadieu (21)
- José Simões (40)
- Nuno Rocha (2)
- Nuno Soares (44)
- Olga Ng Ka Man, Sandra (7)
- Priscilla Roberts (4)
- Tania Marques (2)
-
Faculty of Business and Law
(210)
- Alessandro Lampo (21)
- Alexandre Lobo (91)
- Angelo Rafael (3)
- Douty Diakite (15)
- Emil Marques (2)
- Florence Lei (15)
- Ivan Arraut (17)
- Jenny Phillips (14)
- Sergio Gomes (2)
- Silva, Susana C. (4)
-
Faculty of Health Sciences
(40)
- Angus Kuok (17)
- Cynthia Leong (1)
- Helen Liu (1)
- Maria Rita Silva (1)
- Vitor Santos Teixeira (10)
-
Faculty of Religious Studies and Philosophy
(94)
- Andrew Leong (6)
- Cyril Law (11)
- Edmond Eh (6)
- Fausto Gomez (1)
- Franz Gassner (10)
- Jaroslaw Duraj (9)
- Judette Gallares (3)
- Stephen Morgan (18)
- Thomas Cai (5)
-
Institute for Data Engineering and Sciences
(29)
- George Du Wencai (23)
- Liang Shengbin (9)
-
Institute of Science and Environment
(122)
- Ágata Alveirinho Dias (39)
- Chan Shek Kiu (8)
- David Gonçalves (28)
- Karen Tagulao (17)
- Raquel Vasconcelos (11)
- Sara Cardoso (5)
- Shirley Siu (9)
- Thomas Lei (8)
- Wenhong Qiu (1)
-
Library
(3)
- Emily Chan (3)
-
Macau Ricci Institute
(17)
- Jaroslaw Duraj (4)
- Stephen Rothlin (13)
-
School of Education
(187)
- Elisa Monteiro (7)
- Hao Wu (5)
- Isabel Tchiang (2)
- Keith Morrison (85)
- Kiiko Ikegami (3)
- Miranda Chi Kuan Mak (11)
- Mo Chen (2)
- Rochelle Ge (19)
- Susannah Sun (6)
Resource type
- Blog Post (3)
- Book (59)
- Book Section (128)
- Conference Paper (136)
- Document (4)
- Encyclopedia Article (1)
- Film (1)
- Journal Article (425)
- Magazine Article (17)
- Manuscript (1)
- Newspaper Article (34)
- Preprint (4)
- Presentation (63)
- Radio Broadcast (5)
- Report (62)
- Thesis (1,218)
- TV Broadcast (1)
- Web Page (1)
United Nations SDGs
- 01 - No Poverty (1)
- 02 - Zero Hunger (1)
- 03 - Good Health and Well-being (33)
- 04 - Quality Education (17)
- 05 - Gender Equality (1)
- 07 - Affordable and Clean Energy (3)
- 08 - Decent Work and Economic Growth (6)
- 09 - Industry, Innovation and Infrastructure (25)
- 10 - Reduced Inequalities (1)
- 11 - Sustainable Cities and Communities (11)
- 12 - Responsable Consumption and Production (6)
- 13 - Climate Action (8)
- 14 - Life Below Water (18)
- 15 - Life on Land (4)
- 16 - Peace, Justice and Strong Institutions (2)
- 17 - Partnerships for the Goals (1)
Cooperation
Student Research and Output
-
Faculty of Business and Law
(5)
- Neto, Andreia (1)
-
School of Education
(4)
- Áine Ní Bhroin (1)
- Emily Chan (3)
Publication year
-
Between 2000 and 2024
- Between 2000 and 2009 (155)
- Between 2010 and 2019 (963)
- Between 2020 and 2024 (1,045)